Land of the Lost Wolf9pm, BBC1

Debut of a two-parter that explores one of the essential, vexatious conundrums of conservation: while almost everyone is in favour of the revivification of endangered species, fewer are keen on greater numbers of razor-fanged predators prowling their particular neck of the woods. In the Cascade mountains of Washington state, the first wild wolf packs to roam America's north-west for 70 years have been sighted, an overspill of a re-establishment of wolves in neighbouring Idaho. This appears good news, but local farmers, and deer, beg to differ. Andrew Mueller

Fraud Squad9pm, ITV1

Police go after the eastern European gangs who steal card details from cash machines and commit fraud with them. Not the most dramatic of police procedural documentaries; it's mostly dry footage of coppers describing the cashpoint cloning scams, accompanied by a seriously underwhelming voiceover. They try to spice things up with occasional scenes of surprised Romanians in handcuffs, looking rather fed up as their homes are raided. Julia Raeside

Death Row10pm, Channel 4

Werner Herzog's deadpan documentary style is the perfect foil to this emotive subject. He has been meeting convicts awaiting execution, briefly summarising their cases and moving on – the gravity of the crimes and the sentence implied rather than dwelled on. Tonight's portrait, the last in the series, is of two prisoners – George Rivas and Joseph Garcia – whose fates became intertwined when they both participated in an escape attempt. Herzog's interviewing is surgically precise – if they attempt to evade culpability, he is immediately on their case. John Robinson

Sex and Sensibility: the Allure of Art Nouveau9pm, BBC4

The final part of Stephen Smith's study of art nouveau takes him to Vienna, which at the turn of the 20th century was at the fulcrum of the continent's developments. The suicide of a crown prince saw assumptions about imperial propriety teeter, Freud was unearthing the teeming subconscious and a new, inclusive and (sexually) liberated visual form emerged. Smith's matey narrative style occasionally jars, but this is highly serviceable, gorgeous art history. David Stubbs

Eastbound & Down10pm, FX

At least Shane's surprise death should settle his and Kenny's "Who is Maverick and who is Goose?" argument. While the show is no stranger to darkness, tonight it fully embraces it, when Kenny and Stevie both find different grim ways to disgrace themselves at Shane's funeral. Whoever is choosing the songs for the show is playing a blinder this season: after Bauhaus and the Bangles soundtracked the drug frenzy last week, tonight's tunes almost provide the actual punchlines. Phelim O'Neill

King10pm, Universal Channel

Having spoken out of turn, Toronto detective Jessica King (Amy Price-Francis) is exiled to a cop call-centre. She's also on her third marriage and, although there are hints of ambivalence towards motherhood, trying to get pregnant. Perfect maverick officer material, then, if only King could catch a break. This duly arrives when she is offered a career-resuscitating chance to work at the major crimes task force. A largely by-the-numbers police procedural that has the odd good moment, such as the social embarrassment of a dropped handgun. Jonathan Wright